Dietary vitamin D3 deficiency exacerbates sinonasal inflammation and alters local 25 (OH)D3 metabolism

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Abstract

Rationale: Patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) have been shown to be vitamin D3 (VD3) deficient, which is associated with more severe disease and increased polyp size. To gain mechanistic insights into these observational studies, we examined the impact of VD3 deficiency on inflammation and VD3 metabolism in an Aspergillus fumigatus (Af) mouse model of chronic rhinosinusitis (Af-CRS). Methods: Balb/c mice were fed control or VD3 deficient diet for 4 weeks. Mice were then sensitized with intraperitoneal Af, and one week later given Af intranasally every three days for four weeks while being maintained on control or VD3 deficient diet. Airway function, sinonasal immune cell infiltrate and sinonasal VD3 metabolism profiles were then examined. Results: Mice with VD3 deficiency had increased Penh and sRaw values as compared to controls as well as exacerbated changes in sRaw when coupled with Af-CRS. As compared to controls, VD3 deficient and Af-CRS mice had reduced sinonasal 1α-hydroxylase and the active VD3 metabolite, 1,25(OH)2D3. Differential analysis of nasal lavage samples showed that VD3 deficiency alone and in combination with Af-CRS profoundly upregulated eosinophil, neutrophil and lymphocyte numbers. VD3 deficiency exacerbated increases in monocyte-derived dendritic cell (DC) associated with Af-CRS. Conversely, T-regulatory cells were decreased in both Af-CRS mice and VD3 deficient mice, though coupling VD3 deficiency with Af-CRS did not exacerbate CD4 or T-regulatory cells numbers. Lastly, VD3 deficiency had a modifying or exacerbating impact on nasal lavage levels of IFN-γ, IL-6, IL-10 and TNF-α, but had no impact on IL-17A. Conclusions: VD3 deficiency causes changes in sinonasal immunity, which in many ways mirrors the changes observed in Af-CRS mice, while selectively exacerbating inflammation. Furthermore, both VD3 deficiency and Af-CRS were associated with altered sinonasal VD3 metabolism causing reductions in local levels of the active VD3 metabolite, 1,25(OH)2D3, even with adequate circulating levels.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Model summary and plasma 25(OH)D3 levels. (A) Schematic of the vitamin D deficient Af-CRS protocol. B) Confirmation of 25(OH)D3 deficiency after 4 weeks on VD3 deficient diet. n = 4 control, 6 vitamin D3 deficient [VD3(-)] mice per group. * p<0.05 vs control.
  • Fig 2. VD3 deficiency alone worsens airway function and injury similar to Af-CRS. (A) Penh and (B) sRaw were measured by dual-chamber whole-body restrained plethysmography 24 hours after the last Af i.n. instillation. (C) Nasal lavage total protein was measured as an indicator of upper airway damage. *p<0.01 vs control. # p<0.05 vs Af-CRS. n = 5–6 mice/group.
  • Fig 3. VD3 deficiency and Af-CRS are both associated with reduced sinonasal tissue levels of 1α-hydroxylase and 1,25(OH)2D3. (A) Overlays of representative histograms of total sinonasal 1α-hydroxylase staining. Histogram colors represent: black = isotype control, red = AfCRS 1α-hydroxylase staining, blue = control 1α-hydroxylase. Values shown are the mean fluorescent intensity (MFI) for each of the peaks shown. Quantification of (B) total 1α-hydroxylase and (C) epithelial cell specific 1α-hydroxylase expression were measured by flow cytometry
  • Fig 4. Af-CRS does not alter serum levels of 1,25(OH)2D3 or 25(OH)D3. (A) Serum 1,25(OH)2D3 levels were not significantly different amongst groups, regardless of disease or dietary VD3 status. (B) Serum 25 (OH)D3 levels are not impacted by local inflammation associated with Af-CRS. As expected, mice with dietary VD3 deficiency demonstrate reduced circulating 25(OH)D3 levels. N = 4 mice/group. *p<0.05 between indicated groups.
  • Fig 5. Af-CRS is not associated with sinonasal reductions in 25(OH)D3. Sinonasal levels of 25(OH)D3 were measured by ELISA and results normalized to total protein concentration. Both groups were fed control diet and were systemically 25(OH)D3 sufficient. N = 3 mice/ group.
  • Fig 6. VD3 deficiency exacerbates changes in sinonasal immune cell infiltrate. Both Af-CRS and VD3 deficiency were associated with increased lavage cell counts of (A) total cells, (B) macrophages, (C) eosinophils, (D) neutrophils, and (E) lymphocytes. *p<0.05 between indicated groups. n = 4 mice/group.
  • Fig 7. VD3 deficiency exacerbates increases in sinonasal moDCs, associated with Af-CRS. DC subsets were defined by the following marker combinations; moDCs = CD11b+, CD206+, CD209+, pDC = CD11b-, PDCA-1+, Siglec-H+, cDC (CD11b-) = CD11b-, CD11c+, CD103+, cDC (CD11b+) = CD11b+, CD11c+, CD115. Dead cells excluded by 7AAD. n = 4/per group. *p<0.05 between indicated groups.
  • Fig 8. VD3 deficiency alone causes changes in sinonasal CD4 and T-regs similar to Af-CRS. Sinonasal (A) CD4, (B) CD8 and (C) T-regulatory cells (CD4+CD25+FoxP3+) were identified by immunostaining and flow cytometric analysis. *p<0.05 between indicated groups. n = 4-5/group.

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Mulligan, J. K., Pasquini, W. N., Carroll, W. W., Williamson, T., Reaves, N., Patel, K. J., … Atkinson, C. (2017). Dietary vitamin D3 deficiency exacerbates sinonasal inflammation and alters local 25 (OH)D3 metabolism. PLoS ONE, 12(10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186374

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